Programs

Below is a grid of all of our programs, sorted by day of the week. This symbol indicates that a program is broadcast live from our studios and is available via video at the time it is being aired. To filter programs by ethnic group, please choose from the drop down menu and click "apply." Click on each day of the week to see the full schedule for that day. Click on the name of each show to see further details.

" We are a house of prayer that exist to create an appropriate atmosphere where people of all nations experience the love, the presence, and the power of God through the preaching and teaching of the Bible. we are a place were Jesus’s work of redemption and the power of the Holy Spirit minister to the whole human being through adequate activities."

Welcome to Radio Qale awadi broadcasted by Debreselam Medhane Alem Eritrean Orthodox Tewahdo Church in the diocese of North America. We are Located at 150 S St. N.W. Washington D.C. Our mission is to spread the right teaching of the gospel that we in hearted from the apostles to all nations. Our doors are always open to those who are looking for spiritual support and home and those who want to know Orthodox Tewahdo Faith. Come and visit us at the address mentioned below.

The International Ethiopian Evangelical Church is a vibrant community of believers in the DC Metropolitan Area serving thousands of Ethiopians, Eritrean and other nationalities. In addition, the church is involved in holistic activities, where Ethiopians and Eritrean are facing hardship due to various conditions.

We believe in God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. We believe that salvation is by grace through Christ alone. We believe that baptism is a commandment of our Lord and that it demonstrates to the world our death, burial and resurrection with Christ and our obedience to Him.

To inform the Eritrean community with up to date news from Eritrea and local affairs. To provide a community based broadcast programs designed to inform, educate, and serve the Eritrean community in the Washington, D.C. area.Our goal is to forge closer and stronger bonds within the local community and to maintain a steady communication between Eritrea and the community living in the Washington, D.C area.

This is an Amharic radio show. Hagr Fikr is a community radio show that serves the interests of the Ethiopian community in Washington DC and its surrounding area. We provide information directly from Ethiopia and we play great Ethiopian music.

The Ethiopian Covenant Gospel Church (ECGC) is formed by a willing commitment to what we learn from the Word of God and a desire to commune with one another in the unity of the Spirit. Our identity and unity is created through the word of God and the Spirit of Jesus Christ who is dwelling in every single believer. Jesus Christ is the only single reason for our shared life and fellowship. Our unity is the unity of light and life that is protected by the blood of Jesus Christ.

Our mission is to reveal the truth about Ethiopia's entity as the Kingdom of God and Ethiopians' identity as the People of the Holy Covenant with God; and so, to safeguard and promote all that pertains to Ethiopia and Ethiopians.

Sunday | Domingo

INFOTRAK is the weekly nationally syndicated Public Affairs radio show featuring interviews with experts and authorities, discussing topics of interest to most Americans. Fast paced and lively, INFOTRAK strives to present impartial, balanced coverage of every story.
Each show comes with an Issues Log that's perfect for your FCC Public File.
The show has no corporate, political or religious agenda. The host is an award-winning broadcast veteran; the reporters are seasoned professionals; and the show announcer is one of the nation’s top voiceover talents. The production team is highly skilled too.

It’s no wonder INFOTRAK recently won several top national awards for broadcast excellence. The show has wide appeal. It is now heard weekly on nearly 600 stations across America, including most of the top 50 markets.
INFOTRAK was created with the idea that people like to be in the know when it comes to topics that impact them and their family. So we carefully choose the guest experts and authors we interview, selecting only those with the widest appeal. Topics might include:

Jewish Community Radio, hosted by Estelle Deutsch Abraham, includes music of many Jewish traditions... Sephardi & East European, in Ladino and Yiddish, Israeli music of today and yesterday...new talent from all over the world! Timely interviews with authors, artists, performers, and scholars, along with community cultural events and educational opportunities, complete the fascinating and informative Jewish cultural radio program.

Pat Troy sips tea and milk out of a mug, calling himself a "teetotaler" since age 12.
"I have nothing, you know, against a drink," says the owner of Pat Troy's Restaurant and Pub on Alexandria's North Pitt Street. "But I make sure that people have a nice time. I will not and do not allow people getting cockeyed, and stuff like that.
"But 99 percent of the people have to have a drink to enjoy themselves and that's a fact."
In shirt sleeves, the boss jumps from his seat, flagging a waitress down to seat just-arrived diners.
"It's a new girl, she didn't know what I was talking about," he says. "I'm tense. When I don't see people being waited on, I just get upset."
"Eat your cheeseburger," he says in his bouncing lilt, "it's going to get cold. Our soda bread is homemade."
His cheerful voice pipes up and it's full of stories. He shaved his mustache to look "summerish."
He gets a faraway look and pauses. He opened this new place March 3, but only after a yearlong struggle.
Mr. Troy, 59, opened his first place in 1980, Ireland's Own, the Irish bar that helped make him an Old Town institution. The walls were plastered with patriotism, presidents and Pat Troy.
Facing new landlords and higher rent, Mr. Troy wanted to move the bar from North Royal Street, across from city hall, to a site on North Lee Street. The Alexandria City Council voted him down in February 1999. Politicos praised Mr. Troy, but saw parking and traffic as the problem.
Blarney, Mr. Troy says.
He ticks off his contributions to the city: He started a St. Patrick's Day Parade in a city founded by Scots. He also started the Irish Festival, which was held on Aug. 5 this year. "The thing that really hurt me [was] businesses never came to my aid," he says, except for Gadsby's Tavern Restaurant, Contact Courier and, ironically, Murphy's Grand Irish Pub, up the street. He also owns the 28-year-old Irish Walk on King Street, an Irish specialty shop run by his wife of 35 years, Bernadette, whom he credits for its success.
Mr. Troy says he brought in a lot of revenue for Alexandria, but never asked for anything.
"To my dying day, I'll never forget the people that voted against me," he says. "And the ones that voted for me, I'll never forget them."
The Rev. Stanley Krempa, pastor of St. Mary's Catholic Church for eight years, wrote the zoning commission in favor of Mr. Troy but stayed out of the fray.
"He said any kind of support would help so I did it," Father Krempa says from his new home, the Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish in Winchester, Va. "People talked about it but I wasn't part of that issue. It was not an issue in any way that divided parish life."
Mayor Kerry Donley, a fellow Irishman who voted against the move, admitted to "strained relations" for a month or so with Mr. Troy.
"All in all, everybody's actually happier than we would have had had the original application been approved," says Mr. Donley, also senior vice president at Virginia Commerce Bank, which helped Mr. Troy find the new spot and arrange financing.
"I think ultimately you would have had some upset neighbors down in Old Town, and, I think, a deal that was not financially sound," he says. "I'm focused on the future of Alexandria rather than fixated on the past."
Mr. Troy still calls Alexandria, and particularly its police, "a great city," but admits the experience "will never go away. …

Addis Dimts Radio provides diverse cultural and political perspectives for all Ethiopians globally and we believe in a mixture of private and public partnerships.
We invite all Ethiopians to join us by sharing ideas live on radio and by email at abelewd@yahoo.com. Addis Dimts Radio broadcasts it shows
in Amharic to every Sunday from 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM. The program is broadcasted to the global audience from Washington at WUST AM 1120 and ADDIS DIMTS RADIO and online. On demand radio archives can be found at www.addisdimts.com
For previous shows click here:http://www.addisdimts.com/category/audio-archive/

Our vision is to help individuals be reconciled with God, and person to persons by thus proclaiming the Gospel of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ; and through the teachings of the Word of God, so that believers should grow in Christ-likeness. Our mission is to engage believers in doing the work of the ministry, so that the body of Christ, and our Congregation, grows to maturity, in truth, in love and in the unity of Christ (Eph. 4:11-16; 1 Cor. 12:12-30).

Ethio Diaspora communication began with the aim of providing timely news, social and cultural information, opinions and analysis to the Ethiopian community. Ethio Diaspora Communication is one of the arms for the EICC. Through this branch, EICC engaged in the broadcast and production of Ethio Diaspora Radio programs. We want to Make available Ethiopian literature and information on and provide forums for free discussions regarding Art and Culture.